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Slaughterhouse - FIve
Posted: Fri Nov 09, 2007 7:18 pm
by ab g-d
by Kurt Vonnegut
Like most who have read it, I read it when I was younger, probably 20 or so. Much different read when your older then Billy Pilgrim and understand what life somtimes deals out. I thought is was "cool" then, very different experience now. Since I was a double major in Philosphy and Lit there are a bunch of books I read then, which I think were important in shaping my thinking that I think would be worth "re-reading" now. Reading this again wasn't really re-reading because I'm not the same. Maybe "The Brothers Karamozov" next.
A top 10 book.
Re: Slaughterhouse - FIve
Posted: Fri Nov 09, 2007 7:21 pm
by GoDogGo!
ab g-d wrote:
Like most who have read it, I read it when I was younger, probably 20 or so. Much different read when your older then Billy Pilgrim and understand what life somtimes deals out.
Yes.
So it goes.
Posted: Sat Nov 10, 2007 2:54 am
by DrDonkeyLove
You make a good point about revisiting literature from the perspective of who you are today.
Posted: Sat Nov 10, 2007 11:21 am
by nafod
I've been thinking about reading Atlas Shrugged again for that reason.
Re: Slaughterhouse - FIve
Posted: Wed Nov 28, 2007 11:51 pm
by Erada79
ab g-d wrote:by Kurt Vonnegut
"The Brothers Karamozov" next.
Foxy, Vonnegut stated in either "Slaughterhouse - Five" or "Cat's Cradle" that "everything that anyone needed to know about life could be found in The Brothers Karamozov."
I started reading TBK a few times, but couldn't find the "stick-to-itivness" to make it all the way through.
Dos' makes for good reading.
Re: Slaughterhouse - FIve
Posted: Wed Nov 28, 2007 11:55 pm
by GoDogGo!
Erada79 wrote:ab g-d wrote:by Kurt Vonnegut
"The Brothers Karamozov" next.
Foxy, Vonnegut stated in either "Slaughterhouse - Five" or "Cat's Cradle" that "everything that anyone needed to know about life could be found in The Brothers Karamozov."
I started reading TBK a few times, but couldn't find the "stick-to-itivness" to make it all the way through.
Dos' makes for good reading.
Did you read "The Grand Inquistor" section?
Re: Slaughterhouse - FIve
Posted: Thu Nov 29, 2007 12:22 am
by Erada79
GoDogGo! wrote:Erada79 wrote:ab g-d wrote:by Kurt Vonnegut
"The Brothers Karamozov" next.
Foxy, Vonnegut stated in either "Slaughterhouse - Five" or "Cat's Cradle" that "everything that anyone needed to know about life could be found in The Brothers Karamozov."
I started reading TBK a few times, but couldn't find the "stick-to-itivness" to make it all the way through.
Dos' makes for good reading.
Did you read "The Grand Inquistor" section?
Is the Pope Catholic?
I did read the GI section, GDG. In fact, IIRC, that section is a book itself. I held up well in my LIT class when we were reading Kafka, Camus and Dos.
Have you read TBK,GDG?
Re: Slaughterhouse - FIve
Posted: Thu Nov 29, 2007 1:52 pm
by nafod
Erada79 wrote:Foxy, Vonnegut stated in either "Slaughterhouse - Five" or "Cat's Cradle" that "everything that anyone needed to know about life could be found in The Brothers Karamozov."
Of course, that was before The Godfather Part I had come out.
I'm reading War & Peace right now. Really good book so far.
Re: Slaughterhouse - FIve
Posted: Thu Nov 29, 2007 2:18 pm
by GoDogGo!
Erada79 wrote:
I did read the GI section, GDG. In fact, IIRC, that section is a book itself. I held up well in my LIT class when we were reading Kafka, Camus and Dos.
Have you read TBK,GDG?
Nope. GI, Anna Karenina, some Gogol short stories. That's it for Russians. Oh, and "The Cherry Orchard" and such.
Camus, yes. The Stranger, The Plague.
Re: Slaughterhouse - FIve
Posted: Thu Nov 29, 2007 3:43 pm
by Turdacious
nafod wrote:Erada79 wrote:Foxy, Vonnegut stated in either "Slaughterhouse - Five" or "Cat's Cradle" that "everything that anyone needed to know about life could be found in The Brothers Karamozov."
Of course, that was before The Godfather Part I had come out.
I'm reading War & Peace right now. Really good book so far.
Excellent book. One of my favorite books on russian lit is:
http://www.amazon.com/Tolstoy-Dostoevsk ... 0300069170
Great comparison and contrast of the two authors, if you're a literacy criticism nerd.
Posted: Thu Nov 29, 2007 3:46 pm
by ab g-d
I think Tugenev's "Fathers and Sons" is the most underated russian novel, the RKC of russian novels if you will.
Camus is the man, period.
Posted: Sat Dec 01, 2007 1:33 am
by grey
ab g-d wrote:
Camus is the man, period.
I think it's in The Last Man that the first scene has the main character at fortysomething standing over his fathers grave. He had died in his teens or early twenties in ww1 or ww2. When I was 19 a friend of mine passed away at 23. I knew he was young but he had seemed so much older than me. Years later I happened to be in the area and stopped by his grave. It was strange looking at that stone in honor of a man that died several years younger than me.
Posted: Sat Dec 01, 2007 6:03 pm
by Erada79
ab g-d wrote:I think Tugenev's "Fathers and Sons" is the most underated russian novel
Haven't read it, Bill. I'll have to check it out.
Posted: Sun Dec 02, 2007 11:27 am
by Turdacious
greystuff wrote:ab g-d wrote:
Camus is the man, period.
I think it's in The Last Man that the first scene has the main character at fortysomething standing over his fathers grave. He had died in his teens or early twenties in ww1 or ww2. When I was 19 a friend of mine passed away at 23. I knew he was young but he had seemed so much older than me. Years later I happened to be in the area and stopped by his grave. It was strange looking at that stone in honor of a man that died several years younger than me.
The First Man is a great book.